Answers

0

Micro,

Welcome to AppDeploy.

I am not familiar with WPKG. I will have to check it out and see what it offers. Another option you might want to investigate is pushing your apps with SysInternals PsExec tool. There is a short article here:

http://itninja.com/blog/view/command-line-printer-control-in-2000/xp9

Although the tip talks about pushing .msi's, the principle could be applied to pushing other types of silent installs. Of course, it cannot do anything more with an application that what that app supports via command line.

As for repackaging into .msi - what tool have you been using, and for how long? One of the top ten myths on InstallShield's site about repackaging into .msi is (paraphrased) that all you have to do is buy a tool, take a before and after snapshot of an installation, and compile.

The truth is that that repackaging into .msi (or into any other format) is extremely involved, and requires specialized knowledge/training. That is one of the reasons AppDeploy exists. I know that I continue to find it an invaluable resource.

I will wholey agree, though, that an .msi that does not fully work or is not reliable is not worth having.

The advantages, though, of having a quality .msi are great. Among them, are:

1. being able to install with elevated privileges to non-admin users
2. self-repair capability
3. the ability to create patches and upgrades
4. the ability to push a package via various methods: VB scripts, AD, login script
5. a tremendous ability to customize

This last one is very important in our environment. One of our initiatives is for workstations to be locked down. We build custom actions into our packages to modify security selectively for applications that natively will not run for a non-admin user.

It really comes down to return on investment when it comes to repackaging. We are a network of only 400 client nodes. If we had to go outside for our packaging, we would probably not be doing it at all. I started pitching the idea when I came aboard, and there was skepticism. Eighteen months later, the skepticism is gone. Techs like being able to go to one place, not worry about finding media or license keys, step through dialogue boxes, manually adjust security, etc.